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Human Rights Violations in Occupied
Palestine
The United
Nations Assessment
by Stephen Lendman
Global Research, March 20, 2008
John Dugard is The UN Human Rights Council's Special Rapporteur on
Palestine and a rare public official. In January 2008, he assessed
the situation in Occupied Palestine (OPT). It was detailed,
inclusive and honest. This article discusses his findings in-depth.
Most of them have been widely reported, but they bear repeating
nonetheless. It's because, in this instance, they're from an agency
of the 192 member states world body. It's hoped that source
highlights their importance and adds to their credibility.
From September 25 to October 1, 2007, Dugard visited Gaza,
Jerusalem, Ramallah, Bethlehem, Jericho, Nablus, Qalqiliya and the
Jordan valley and held extensive meetings with: Palestinian and
Israeli NGOs, UN agencies, Palestinian and Jordanian officials,
academics, businessmen, and independent interlocutors. He also went
to Gazan factories and West Bank checkpoints and settlements and saw
firsthand the situation on the ground.
For his efforts, Dugard is both praised and criticized. Extremists
even condemn him. It's the price he and others pay for assessing
conditions honestly. He addressed his critics and what they cite:
-- that his reports are repetitious; he agrees because Israel
repeats the same human rights and humanitarian law violations and
has done it for over 40 years of occupation. They feature:
"(Illegal) settlements, checkpoints, demolition of houses, torture,
closure of crossings and military incursions...." More recently, add
the separation wall (since 2003), "sonic booms, (stepped up)
targeted killings, (using) Palestinians as human shields, and the
humanitarian crisis" in Gaza since Hamas was democratically elected
in January 2006.
-- that he fails to address "terrorism;" he calls it a "scourge"
with violations by both sides but with a huge disproportionate
difference; for their part, Palestinians are conducting a national
liberation struggle "against colonialism, apartheid (and) military
occupation." He doesn't condone rocket attacks or suicide bombings
but compares them historically to earlier "acts of terror" under
military occupation - against the Nazis, South Africa in Namibia and
in pre-1948 Mandate Palestine by Jewish terrorist groups in which
two future Israeli prime ministers were leaders. Violence will
continue as long as the Territories are occupied and Israel treats
the population repressively; Israel understands this, yet continues
its harshness, and does so for strategic reasons.
-- that he fails to address Palestinian human rights violations; he
cites the occupation that causes them on both sides and stopping
them requires it "be brought to a speedy end;" further, his Special
Rapporteur mandate is to report on the occupier's violations, not
the people occupied, and he's doing his job.
Forty Years of Occupation
For Palestinians, occupation is their core issue and the reason
violence continues. In its 2004 Advisory Opinion on the Legal
Consequences of the Construction of a Wall in the Occupied
Palestinian Territory, the International Court of Justice (ICJ or
World Court) held the following: that Palestine (including East
Jerusalem) "remain occupied territories and Israel has continued to
have the status of occupying Power." This requires its government to
adhere to the Fourth Geneva Convention protection of civilians in
time of war, and to the International Covenants on Civil and
Political Rights and on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. It's
further argued that 40 years in charge increased Israel's
obligations. Its occupation now is more unlawful because it's
continued to violate international laws all this time.
The Occupation of Gaza
Dugard assessed conditions in Gaza in its earliest days under siege,
excluding the intensified harshness in recent months.
He discounted the notion that Ariel Sharon's 2005 "evacuation"
changed anything. On September 19, 2007, however, it changed plenty
when Israel declared Gaza a "hostile territory," Secretary of State
Rice concurred, and fuel, electricity and other essential supplies
and services were severely cut.
Under international law, Dugard asserts that "effective control"
determines whether a territory is occupied, not a physical presence
on the ground. International law also requires an occupier to
guarantee the civilian population's welfare. By this standard,
Israel violates its obligation, Gaza's occupation never ended, and
pretending otherwise is a charade. The following factors reflect
conditions on the ground:
-- Israel maintains control of Gaza's six land crossings - Erez into
Israel; Rafah into Egypt in violation of the November 2005
negotiated Agreement on Movement and Access between the Palestinian
Authority (PA) and Israel - brokered by the US, EU and the
international community's envoy for Gaza's disengagement; Karmi
that's the main access for goods into the Territory; Karem Shalom
and Sufa for goods as well and one other; the effects on Gazans have
been "disastrous;"
-- Israeli control through military incursions, "rocket attacks and
sonic booms," and declaring sections of Gaza "no-go" zones where
residents entering will be shot;
-- control of Gaza's airspace and territorial waters; and
-- control of the Palestinian Population Registry; it allows Israel
to decide through a system of identity cards - who's a Palestinian,
who resides in Gaza and the West Bank, and who may or may not enter
or leave either Territory.
Israeli Actions Against Gaza and Their Consequences
Since dismantling Gaza's settlements in 2005, Israel undertook a
number of actions that are repressive and violate international law:
A. Military action
-- even before the latest invasion and mass-killings, Dugard
reported through late last year - 290 Gaza killings of which at
least one-third were civilians; on September 26 when he was in Gaza,
IDF missiles killed 12 Palestinians; after the November 27 Annapolis
meeting, over 70 Palestinians were killed (up to an unmentioned
date), including eight in a "major military operation in southern
Gaza" the day before the Annapolis session began.
-- Dugard noted the frequency of targeted killings and other IDF
international law violations; he further stated that Israeli
security forces killed 668 Palestinians in Gaza in the "past two
years (2006 and 2007)" and over half of them (359) were uninvolved
in hostilities; 126 were minors; 361 were by missile attacks; and 29
were targeted killings; during the same period, Palestinian rockets
killed four Israeli civilians and injured "hundreds;" four Israeli
security forces were also killed.
B. Closure of crossings
An additional effect was to strand 6000 Palestinians on the Egyptian
side with inadequate accommodations and facilities; they were denied
their right to return home, and, as a result, 30 people died from
neglect or inability to treat illness.
C. Reducing fuel and electricity
This action followed the September 19 declaration of Gaza as a
"hostile territory;" ten Israeli and Palestinian NGOs petitioned
Israel's High Court to halt the action on humanitarian grounds and
because it constitutes collective punishment against innocent
civilians; nonetheless, the Israeli Supreme Court upheld the action,
and by last October, supplies were cut by more than half; since
then, they continue being drastically reduced.
D. Terminating banking facilities
After September 19, the two Israeli commercial banks in Gaza (Bank
Hapoalim and Discount Bank) suspended operations in the Territory;
henceforth, they refused to clear checks, handle cash transfers or
supply Israeli shekels that's the official Occupied Territory (OPT)
currency; it effectively halted Gaza's monetary system.
E. Gaza's humanitarian crisis
All the above actions produced a devastating humanitarian crisis,
Dugard covered it through late last year, and conditions continue
deteriorating:
1. Food
As of last year, over 80% of Gazans needed food aid - from the UN
Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East
(UNRWA) and the World Food Program (WFP); what's available is very
basic and excludes fruits, vegetables, meat and fish; the aid is
vital but extremely inadequate.
2. Unemployment and poverty
Border closures prevent exports and imports; the result is Gazan
factories closed, construction halted and farm output was also
affected; farmers have no income, 65,000 factory jobs were lost as
well as 121,000 in construction-related projects; the Palestinian
Federation of Industries reported 95% of Gaza's industry was
shuttered; Israel also banned coastal fishing throwing Palestinian
fishermen out of work and cutting off a vital food source; in
addition, without resources, Gaza City's municipal employees haven't
been paid since March 2007; over 80% of Gazans live below the
official poverty line, and conditions are dire and worsening.
3. Health care
Here, too, the situation is dire; everything is in short supply or
unavailable, including 91 "key" drugs; seriously ill patients are
prohibited from leaving the Territory (with few exceptions) for care
unavailable inside; the World Health Organization said that
restrictions caused an increasing number of patients to die; the
Israeli NGO, Physicians for Human Rights, reported 44 deaths since
June 2007, and in November alone, 13 Palestinians died; also in
November, Gazan hospitals couldn't perform surgery because Israel
prevented the importation of anesthetics.
4. Education
Gazan children in UNRWA schools "lag behind refugee children
elsewhere;" in addition, students are prevented from studying
abroad, and in November 670 of them were denied permission for
foreign study, including six Fulbright scholars.
5. Fuel, energy and water
Gaza depends largely on Israel for supply; with restrictions, power
outages are frequent, and basic facilities like hospitals are
severely hampered; insufficient power for pumping also affects the
water supply; as a result, 210,000 people only have access to it one
or two hours a day; sewage is also a major problem; facilities are
in disrepair and overflows are frequent and cause severe potential
health problems; Dugard called the situation "catastrophic" under
Israel-imposed restrictions.
F. Legal consequences of Israel's actions
Israel calls its attacks defensive, but it's not how Dugard sees
them; he questions their proportionality, the IDF's failure to
distinguish between military and civilian targets, and their
directly attacking civilians to inflict collective punishment; he
further states: "It is highly arguable that Israel has violated the
most fundamental rules of international humanitarian law, which
constitutes war crimes in terms of Article 147 of the Fourth Geneva
Convention and Article 85 of the Protocol Additional to the Geneva
Conventions of 12 August 1949....relating to the Protection of
Victims of International Armed Conflicts."
Further, the siege "violates a whole range of obligations under both
human rights and humanitarian law," including the right of everyone
to "an adequate standard of living for himself and his family (that
includes) adequate food, clothing and housing;" above all, "Israel
has violated the prohibition on collective punishment of an occupied
people" as covered in Article 33 of the Fourth Geneva Convention;
its government is guilty of using "indiscriminate and
excessive....force against civilians and civilian objects" as well
as denying all sorts of freedoms and essential needs.
Gaza is "no ordinary state;" It's "occupied territory in whose
well-being all States have an interest....are required to promote
(and are obliged) to ensure compliance by Israel (in accordance
with) international humanitarian law....;" failure to do so makes
other states complicit in the siege; they and Israel also violate
international law.
Human Rights in the West Bank and Jerusalem
In the Fatah-controlled West Bank, Israel made "some (modest)
gestures of rapprochement," but did nothing to dismantle the
occupation's infrastructure. On the contrary, it continues to expand
"the instruments that most seriously violate human rights - military
incursions, settlements, the separation wall, (free movement)
restrictions, the Judaization of Jerusalem, and the demolition of
houses."
A. Military incursions
Since June 2007, they've intensified in the West Bank; in November
alone, the IDF conducted 786 raids, killed one person (plus at least
two others he didn't report), injured 67 others and made 398
arrests; in addition, public and private properties were damaged;
curfews were imposed, and "countless innocent civilians" were
terrorized by security forces and dogs; in all cases, these actions
violate international laws that prohibit them.
B. Settlements and settlers
By Dugard's count, there are 149 settlements in the West Bank and
East Jerusalem, and despite promises to freeze their growth, the
settler population increased by 63% since 1993 to its present (year
end) size of 460,000. In addition, by late last year, new
construction was under way in 88 settlements, and their average
growth is 4.5% compared to 1.5% inside Israel. An additional 105
"outposts" are also in place - informal structures that precede new
settlement activity that are unauthorized but still funded by
government ministries. In the so-called "road map," Israel indicated
it would dismantle all outposts but never did, and at year end more
than 38% of the West Bank consisted of settlements, outposts,
military areas, nature reserves off limits to Palestinians, and
connecting roads for Jews only.
In addition, under Article 49, paragraph 6 of the Fourth Geneva
Convention, settlements are illegal. The International Court of
Justice's (ICJ) Advisory Opinion on the construction of the
separation wall affirmed it. Dugard refers to "Israel's contempt for
international law," and its actions confirm it. In December, shortly
after the Annapolis meeting, Tel Aviv announced plans for 307 new
apartments in the Har Homa settlement, but there's more as well - an
extensive new "E1" project with 3500 apartments, 10 hotels and an
industrial park for 14,500 settlers near Maale Adumin. To complete
it, Israel expropriated Palestinian land in Abu Dis, Sawareh, Nabi
Moussa and al-Khan al-Ahmar for an alternate Palestinian road to
Jericho that frees the area for "E1."
The road is devious. It's part of a larger scheme to replace
territorial contiguity with "transportational contiguity" that will
work like this - two alternate road and tunnel networks will be
constructed, one connecting Palestinian cantons, the other for Jews
only, and expropriated Palestinian land will be used for the
project.
C. Checkpoints, roadblocks and permits that obstruct free movement
Dugard calls their existence "disastrous....for both personal life
and the (Palestinian) economy." In the West Bank, he cites 561
"obstacles to (free) movement." They comprise over 80 manned
checkpoints and much more:
-- 476 unmanned locked gates;
-- earth mounds;
-- concrete blocks;
-- ditches; and
-- thousands of temporary checkpoints, called flying checkpoints,
for limited periods that are sometimes only hours. In November 2007,
there were 429 of them in the West Bank.
Palestinian travel is also restricted or prohibited with permits
(like South Africa's "pass laws") required for transit between the
West Bank and East Jerusalem. These restrictions violate Article 12
of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, and the
ICJ held that Israel is bound by this law in the OPT. Israel,
however, cites "security" for having them, but Dugard states this
"is difficult to accept." A more likely reason is they "serve the
convenience of settlers, to facilitate (their) travel and to impress
upon the Palestinian people the power and presence of the occupier."
Checkpoints humiliate Palestinians on their own land. They deepen
hostility, and "do more to create insecurity than to achieve
security." Further, Yedioth Ahronoth (Israel's largest circulation
newspaper) reports that one-fourth or more of all IDF soldiers say
they witnessed abuse against Palestinian civilians at checkpoints.
D. The wall
Dugard bluntly states that: "The wall that Israel
is....building....is clearly illegal." The ICJ affirmed it and ruled
that Israel is obligated to discontinue construction and dismantle
sections already built. Israel ignores the ruling but "abandoned its
claim that the wall is (for) security." It now concedes that one of
its main purposes is to "include settlements within Israel."
Its planned length is 721 kilometers. Ten percent or more of it is
on confiscated Palestinian land. Through late last year, 59% was
completed, 200 kilometers were built after the ICJ ruling, and when
construction is finished around "60,000 West Bank Palestinians (in)
42 villages and towns will reside in the closed zone between the
wall and the Green Line" separating Israel from Palestine. Moreover,
its route may be altered to include up to 13% of Palestinian land,
including "many of the West Bank's valuable water resources and its
richest agricultural lands."
The consequences for Palestinians are devastating. They're cut off
from work, schools, universities, medical facilities, and their
overall "community life is seriously fragmented." Most often,
farmers on the wrong side of the wall can't get permits to reach
their land, harvest their crops or graze their animals.
In addition, the opening and closing of gates (in the wall) is
"highly restrictive." The UN's Office for the Coordination of
Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) surveyed 67 communities near its
location. It showed only 19 gates were open to Palestinians for
daily or year round use, but it's worse than that. Thousands of
Palestinians have been displaced, and the IDF abuses and humiliates
Palestinians able to enter or leave the closed zone.
Dugard cites the village of Jayyus. He was there on September 30 and
saw what their people endure:
-- the wall separates its 3200 residents from their farmland;
-- 68% of the village's agricultural land and its six wells are in
the closed zone between the wall and the Green Line and are off
limits without a visitor's permit;
-- scores of greenhouses are in the closed zone; they produce
tomatoes, cucumbers and sweet peppers that need daily irrigation;
and
-- only 40% of Jayyus' residents have permits to access their farms,
and gate opening times are limited and arbitrary; as a result, by
August 2004 (one year after the wall's construction) local fruit and
vegetable production fell from seven to four million kilograms.
Since then, things have deteriorated further.
Within the Jerusalem Governorate (one of 16 Palestinian Governorates
in the West Bank), the wall covers 168 kilometers. In the Jerusalem
municipality, many Palestinian villages are outside the wall and
separated from the city. In places like Abu Dis and elsewhere, the
wall runs through Palestinian communities, separating neighbors and
families. Overall, it cuts off about 25% of the 253,000 East
Jerusalem Palestinians. They can only enter the city through
checkpoints and are thus impeded from accessing hospitals, schools,
universities, work and holy sites, including the Al Aqsa Mosque.
E. House demolitions
Home demolitions are a "regular feature" of Israel's occupation for
the following claimed reasons - military necessity, punishment, and
failure to obtain a building permit. Dugard condemns them as
"discriminatory" actions "to demonstrate the power of the occupier
over the occupied," and here's what Palestinians are up against.
In East Jerusalem and Area C of the West Bank (comprising 60% of the
Territory), permits must be obtained for construction. But they're
hard to get, bureaucratic procedures for them are cumbersome, and in
practice few are granted. Palestinians need homes, so they build
them anyway, and it gets them in trouble. Throughout the Territory,
Arab structures are demolished but not Jewish ones, and what's
affected are homes, schools, clinics and mosques on the grounds that
permits weren't obtained.
The numbers are revealing. For the two year period up to May 2007,
354 Palestinian structures were destroyed as well as those of
Bedouin communities. One was the Jordan Valley Al Hadidiya village
that's regularly targeted for removal with a committed aim - to
cleanse the area for expanded Roi, Bega'ot and Hamda Jewish
settlements at the expense of its Arab residents. In September 2007,
the IDF hit it hard. It destroyed the structures of about 200
families in violation of Article 53 of the Fourth Geneva Convention
that prohibits the destruction of personal property "except where
such destruction is rendered absolutely necessary by military
operations." That wasn't the case in this instance. Nor was it when
homes were destroyed in the Qalqiliya Naqar neighborhood the
previous month, or in nearly every other case of indiscriminate
demolition.
F. Humanitarian situation
Dugard cites the dire effects on "the economy, health, education,
family life and (overall) standard of living (from) the wall
(construction), expansion of settlements, restrictions on (free)
movement, house demolitions and (repeated) military incursions." And
since Hamas' 2006 election, the situation seriously deteriorated.
Through year end 2007, West Bank humanitarian conditions showed no
material improvement even under Fatah control. Palestinian resources
are inadequate; the occupation continues; human rights violations
are commonplace; poverty and unemployment "are at their highest
levels ever;" military incursions undermine health, education and
general welfare; the wall and checkpoints are repressive; and the
overall "social fabric of society is threatened."
G. Conclusion
The situation in the West Bank isn't as dire as in Gaza, but it's
just "a matter of degree" under conditions of collective punishment.
Throughout the OPT, Israel violates international law, and it must
be held accountable for its actions.
Israel's Treatment of Arrested Persons and Convicted Prisoners
Dugard estimates since 1967 over 700,000 Palestinians have been
imprisoned. Through year end 2007, Israelis held 11,000 or more
prisoners, including "376 children, 118 women, (and) 44 Palestinian
Legislative Council (PLC) members." In addition, there are "some 800
(or more) 'administrative detainees' " (other estimates place the
figure much higher) against whom no charges were made and who are
held for renewable six month periods. Israel calls them
"terrorists." Palestinians say they're "political prisoners who have
committed crimes against" an illegal occupation.
A. Arrested and detained persons
Prisoners are subjected to "humiliating and degrading treatment."
They're stripped, interrogated, beaten, tortured and deprived of
their basic needs. The treatment of children is equally disturbing,
according to the Palestine Section of Defence for Children
International. It states that children are detained for between
eight to 21 days before being brought to court. They're denied the
presence of a parent or lawyer during interrogation, cursed,
threatened, beaten and kept in solitary confinement throughout their
ordeal. This type treatment terrifies adults. Imagine what it does
to young children.
B. Convicted prisoners and administrative detainees
Prison conditions are harsh. Many prisoners are housed in tents that
are extremely hot in summer and cold in winter. Overcrowding is
serious, food is poor and anaemia among prisoners is common. This
violates the letter and spirit of various Fourth Geneva Convention
provisions that govern how an Occupying Power must treat prisoners.
The role of prison medical doctors must also be questioned. They
witness inhumane treatment - wounds, swollen limbs, signs of
violence - but remain silent and ignore the torture taking place.
This raises serious ethical questions about their behavior.
Self-Determination
This is a legal and humanitarian right that's recognized by the
Security Council, General Assembly, ICJ and even Israel. It applies
to everyone, but for nearly 60 years, it's been denied in Occupied
Palestine. It's even worse since the West Bank and Gaza were
separated and are under different authorities.
Dugard stated that it's "a matter of deep concern (to him that he
sees) no immediate prospect of reconciliation between Hamas and
Fatah." He said it should also concern the Quartet (the US, Russia,
EU and UN) and other international institutions, but what matters
most is how they show support. It should not be for one faction over
another. It should reconcile differences between both sides and
unite them for self-determination within the West Bank, Gaza and
East Jerusalem. So far, however, no efforts are being made, and
divisive policies are being pursued that support one side while
isolating the other.
International Law, the International Court of Justice, the Quartet
and the UN
On December 8, 2003, the General Assembly asked the ICJ for an
advisory opinion on Israel's separation wall. The Court's ruling
"answered many legal questions that have been raised over the past
40 years." Principally, they were as follows:
-- Palestinians are entitled to self-determination; the wall's
construction violates it;
-- Israel is legally required to comply with Fourth Geneva
Convention provisions;
-- under Geneva's Article 49 (6), settlements are illegal;
-- Israel is required to abide by international human rights law in
the OPT;
-- Israel's closed zone (between the wall and Green Line) violates
Palestinians' free movement rights and their right to work, health,
education and an adequate standard of living;
-- destroying property for the wall's construction (including in and
around East Jerusalem) violates international law; Israel must halt
construction, dismantle portions built and make reparations for the
damage done;
-- all UN member states are legally obliged to recognize Israel's
non-compliance with Fourth Geneva Convention provisions;
-- the UN (especially General Assembly and Security Council) should
address actions required to end the illegal situation resulting from
the wall's construction;
-- on July 20, 2004, the General Assembly overwhelmingly adopted
Resolution ES-10/15; it called for Israel to comply with the ICJ's
Advisory Opinion;
-- since 2004, the Security Council ignored the Advisory Opinion
while the General Assembly and Human Rights Council affirmed it;
inaction by the Security Council is because the US continues to
block it in support of Israel and also prevents the Quartet from
implementing the Opinion; as a result, the Quartet never
acknowledged it ;
-- the ICJ's Advisory Opinion is "an authoritative statement of the
applicable law," but it's not legally binding on States; however,
the ICJ is the UN's judicial organ, and the General Assembly
overwhelmingly approved the Opinion; it's thus now UN law and the
Secretary-General or his representative is obliged to enforce it -
to ensure that member States are in compliance; and
-- for over 40 years, UN member States, its political organs and
individuals have accused Israel of "consistent, systematic and gross
violations of human rights and humanitarian law in the OPT;" in
2004, the ICJ agreed; it stated these violations can't be justified
on grounds of self-defense or necessity; the UN is obligated to act;
failure to do so "brings the very commitment of the United Nations
to human rights into question."
Peace Talks
Dugard noted that it's not within his mandate to address what's
"essentially a political process," except as it relates to human
rights. On that basis, he stated that Oslo failed the Palestinian
people by paying inadequate attention to international law and human
rights issues. He hoped the Annapolis process would correct this,
but early indications suggest otherwise.
A joint November 27 statement highlighted the problem. It said
participants would negotiate on the 2003 "road map," not on the
ICJ's Advisory Opinion that detailed Israel's human rights
violations. Any hope for peace, however, requires they be addressed
and resolved, but so far they're being ignored.
Dugard calls the "road map" inappropriate and unhelpful for the
following reasons:
-- it's outdated: it ignores ICJ's Advisory Opinion; doesn't
recognize Hamas' democratic election; doesn't address Israel's Gaza
withdrawal; or the June 2007 Gaza and West Bank separation;
-- Israel attached 14 reservations to the "road map" that call into
question its commitment; and
-- Israel's language shows a further lack of commitment by stating
the initiative is "a performance-based and goal driven roadmap."
International law under Article 47 of the Fourth Geneva Convention
is one of many serious matters at issue. It affirms that persons
under occupation retain their legal rights under any agreement
"between the authorities of the occupied territories and the
Occupying Power (and) any annexation by the latter of the whole or
part of the occupied territory." This means that any recognition of
Israeli settlements in Occupied Palestine is illegal under
international law. It also highlights the dangers of negotiations
between unequals with Israelis controlling everything and
Palestinians at their mercy.
An equitable agreement is impossible under these conditions, and
Dugard states the only way negotiations should proceed. They must
take place "within a normative framework, with the guiding norms to
be found in international law, particularly international
humanitarian and human rights law, the (ICJ) Advisory Opinion, and
Security Council resolutions." The effort cannot proceed as an
exercise in "political horse-trading." Doing so guarantees failure,
but more is at stake as well.
Creating a Palestinian state won't heal 60 years of conflict that's
gone all Israel's way and inflicted great harm and suffering on the
Palestinian people. At some point, real peace is only possible if a
supreme effort is made toward true reconciliation between the two
sides. That entails addressing events, actions and past sufferings
fully and honestly. Dugard suggests a South African-style Truth and
Reconciliation Commission for an open airing by both sides. Unless
it happens in good faith, tensions will remain and peace won't be
possible. Up to now, it appears Israel wants it that way.
A Final Comment
Ahead of Israel's 60th anniversary and worldwide commemoration
events, the Canada - Palestine Support Network (CanPalNet) will run
one or more full-page ads in protest. It's headlined: "We Cannot
Celebrate," and below is the text.
"Around the world, plans are being made to mount major celebrations
of the 60th anniversary of the founding of the state of Israel. But
this year also marks 60 years since 750,000 Palestinians were
brutally expelled from their homeland in what they refer to as the
Nakba or "catastrophe." Given this history, and the deepening
conflict in the region today, we believe there are no grounds for
celebration.
We cannot celebrate
while Israel starves and bombs the people of Gaza.
We cannot celebrate
while Israel extends its apartheid wall.
We cannot celebrate
while Israel builds Jewish only settlements on roads on stolen
Palestinian lands.
We cannot celebrate
while Israel continues to violate United Nations Resolution 194,
refusing to let Palestinians return to their homes.
We cannot celebrate
while Israel continues to promote wars and expand its nuclear
arsenal.
We cannot celebrate
as long as the policies of Israel's leaders fuel a conflict in which
innocent lives on both sides are lost.
We can and will continue our efforts to end these injustices,
upholding international law, human rights and United Nations
resolutions. This is the only road map to peace."
Global Research Associate Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago and can
be reached at
lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=8394
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